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RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY

UNITED:
OR,

AN ATTEMPT TO SHOW THAT PHlLOSOPIDCAL PRINCIPLES


UE AT THE FOUNDATION OF THE
NEW JERUSALEM CHURCH.

~ 'd(,~
MftS._ M. H. PRESCOTT.
""""
SE(.'OND EDITION.

WITH A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR,

BY BER SON,

REV. 0, PRESCOTT BILLER.


"

LONDON:
WILLIAM WHITE, 36, BLOOMSBURY STREET.
BOSTON: OTIS CLAPP, 3, BEACON STREET.
1856.
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THE GIFT OF
OLIVER PRESCOTT HILLER
OF LONDON

~HARVARD COLLEGELIBRARY~

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GLASGOW:
PRtNTED DY BEJ.L AND BAIN.

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PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.

THE first edition of the following little work was


published at Boston, United States, in the year
1817, and has been long out ofprint. On arriving
in this country, l was gratified at finding copies in
the libraries of several English N ewchurchmen, one
of whom was the late Mr. Noble. The name of
the author was not, however, generall:r known, as
it was not affixed ta the original edition. A pos-
sessor of one of the copies, a Minister of the Church,
on leaTning that the work wa.s by my mother,
warmly urged me to re-publish it. The idea had pre-
viously oeeurred ta myself, but wa.s mueh strength-
ened by a recommendation from sueh a quarter.
l felt, moreover, in a manner, eonstrained by a
sense of filial duty, ta undertake it; and l may
frankly add, that, after a careful penlsal of the
work in my Inature years, its intrinsie value seemed
to me a sufficient reason for iu. re-publication. It.
il Dot, perhaps, becoming in llo son ta speak too
iv PREFACE.

strongly in this regard; yet, when, in particular, the


period of its publication is considered, it will, 1
think, be pronounced a work of more than ordinary
literary merit. At that time, few, comparatively,
of the collateral wOl'ks of the Church had been
published. Mr. N oble's "Appeal" and other excellent
works had not yet appeared; and, in America, so
far as 1 am aware, nothing whatever of the kind
hall been written. So that this little work stands
among the very beginnings of New Church litera-
ture, and from that circumstance alone possesses a
certain value, which will be enhanced with the
progress of time. It may be added, that the fact
of a work of this philosophical and abstract cha-
racter being written by a lady, is a circumstance
which tends also to invest it with more than a
common interest. The attempt itself at the pro-
duction of such a work, is pl'oof of a high degree of
elevation of intellect and power of abstract thought;
and ü the execution of the plan be not found com-
mensurate with its conception, the writer has herself
furnished the apology. N ear the close of the work,
she has the following remark :-" In mankind, the
particular receptacle for the light of divine truth is
the understanding, 'and that for the heat of divine
love is the will; 80, the male is formed to excel
his panner in the department of the understanding,
PREFACE. v

ami consequent reception of divine wisdom; and


the female to be distinguished by the predominance
of the love of wisdom as existing in the male. Thus,
if the writer has herein given but an obscure and
very imperfect sketch of the philosophical princi-
pIes, which form the basis of a glorious system of
divine truth,-it is, that its heavenly image bas
bean received in the warmth of the heart rather than
in the light of the understanding; and that, to be
fully illustrated, it must be transfused from the
feminine heart into the masculine understanding,
thence to be made manifest in the light of true
wisd omo "
In the present edition, a slight change has been
made in the arrangement of the Chapters,-what
were originally a "Preface" and an "Introduction"
being taken into the body of the work, and headed
Chapters 1. and II. With these exceptions, and an
occasional verbal correction, the work remains as
originally published.
O. P. H.

UL.UGOW, N~ 4, 18li6.
CONTENTS.

MEMOIR OF MRS. PRESCOTT 9

CHAPTER J.
I~RODUCTORY 21
CHAPTER II.
ENDEAVOURING TO PROVE THREE PROPOSITIONS 29

CHAPTER III.
ON THE PHILOSOPHICAL PRINCIPLES IN GENERAL,
UNFOLDED IN THE SYSTEM OF SWEDENBORG 38

CHAPTER IV.
ON THE PRINCIPLE OF SPHERES, AS UNFOLDED IN
THE COMMUNICATIONS OF SWEDENBORG 43

CHAPTER V.
ON THE PRINCIPLE OF DEGREES, AS COMMU1!lI-
CATED BY THE SAME FAITHFUL MESSENGER 49

CDAPTER VI.
ON THE PRINCIPLE OF CORBESPONDENCE, AS
DEVELOPED BY THE SAME 56
-----------_. -----
MEMOIR OF MRS. PRESCOTI.

MRs. MARGARET HILLER PRESCO'IT was a daughter


of Major Joseph Hiller, of Salem, Massachusetts.
The fa.mily came originally from the town of
Watford in Hertfordshire, England, whence an
ancestor, Joseph Hiller, emigrated to America, in
the year 1677, and settled Ilot Boston. The father
of the subject of this sketch removed, early in life,
to Salem, where he married Mu.rgaret Cleveland.
Six children were born to them, five daughters and
a son : -Margaret was the third child.
8he was born in July, 1775, in the State of Con-
necticut, whither her mother had retired from the
dangers of the Revolutionary War, then just com-
mencing.
From her earliest childhood, Mrs. Prescott was
• remarkable for her feelings of piety and habits of
devotion. She would go alone through storms to
church on the Sabbath, rather than millS the services
of public worship. She was equally regular and
ea.rnest in her private devotions. The following
B
10 MEMOIR.

passages of a communication from her youngest


sister, written in answer to a 1etter of inquiry, state
this fact in artless yet glowing terms, mentioning at
the same time other particulars, which set forth in
a striking manner Mrs. Prescott's early spiritua1-
mindedness and moral e1evation of character :
" You will remember," remarks the writer, "that
1 was the youngest of the six children, and that
there were two between your mother and myself, so
that of her young .life 1 really know nothing but
that she was ever pure-minded, warm-hearted, and
peculiarly and steadily religioUB,-as my mother
often expressed it, 'sanctified from her birth.' 8he
was a strict disciplinarian over her own heart, and
tenderly active and interested in training her little
sister Lucy [the writer] to the difficult and almost
hopeless task of self-control and self-improvement.
Rer habits of private devotion, so strict and celÙle-
less, deeply impressed my young mind. 1 remember
weIl, that a little unfinished shapeless room, in the
attic, was taken into her possession, rubbish removed
into one corner, and in the other she had fixed a
cushioned c11air covered with a blanket, and a
kneeling-stool before it. To this, in the coldest
season, she would daily resort j and, covered with
the blanket, she would enjoy an hour of sacred
devotion, reading and prayer.
MEMOIR. 11

"When l was about a dozen years old, although


in the same family and house, we kept up a regular
correspondence, for a long period. Her letters would
have made a volume :-she, scrutinizing, watching,
commending or reproving my daily life, my wrong
or right feeling, my victories or submission when
assailed by temptation, full of earnest exhortation and
tenderest love :-1, drinking in instruction, stimu-
lated to effort, or sorrowing over the delinquencies
and wanderings she so faithfully pointed out, and
glowing with devout gratitude for any deserved
praise. To her latest days, ar- peculiar tenderness
for her pupi! continued to glow, and was often ex-
pressed with earnest feeling."
How does this artless picture of my mother's early
habits of devotion, bring to my mind what l have
oft,en myself witnessed when a child! When in
health, she was the earliest riser of the family;
and often, when l came down in the morning, would
I find her, as l opened the parlour door, kneeling
before the fue, with the large Bible on the chair in
front of her. And when she saw me, she would calI
Ille to her and bid me kneel down by her side.
What mere teaching, what mere precepts, could
have ever made upon my young heart Buch an im-
pression, as did this example of devotion !
But l have anticipated. About the time of her
12 MEMom.

arriving at womanhood, a circumstance occurred


which had the deepest influence on Mrs. Preseott's
whole after-life: that circumstance waa her ooming
to the knowledge of the Doctrines of the New
Church. It happened in the following manner.
:fIer father, Major Hiller, after serving in the War
of Independence, had been appointed by President
Washington to the office of Collector of customs for
the port of Salem, which office he eontinued to hold
f(}r many years. He was a man of sterling upright-
ness and integrity of character, and also very
religiously disposed. But, though a member of the
Episcopal church, his mind had never been satisfied
in regard to points of doctrine, and particularly in
reference to the Doctrine of the Trinity. How
there could be three Persons and one God, he could
never satisfactorily discern; and he longed for light
upon this point. The light was on its way for him.
One Sabbath evening, calling in, as was his wont,
to visit his pastor,-the minister exclaimed, as he
opened the study door, "Ha! Major Hiller, l have
a treat for you here. Here is a man who pretends
to give a full description of the next world, heaven
and hell. W ould you like to read the book~" My
grandfather, surprised at the minister's exclama-
tion, and struck with the title of the book produced,
expressed a curiosity to read it. "0, you are quite
HEMOm. 13

welcome to it," Baid the other, "I have ha.d enough


of it." Âccordingly, he took the book home, anxious
to Bee what the writer had to sayon so remarkable
a subject.
The work was Swedenborg's "Treatise on Heaven
and Hell" He, in company with Mrs. Hiller, who
was a true partner to him, and who had suffered
doubts similar to his own, immediately commenced
the perusal of the volume. Before they ha.d read it
half through, they were satisfied that it eontained
truth and the truth. Major Hiller at once procured
from England more of Swedenborg's worka, and
became an earnest receiver of the New Church
Doctrines. This waa, it is believed, about the year
1796 or 1797.
Some of the younger members of the family now
commenced reading; and Margaret, with one of her
siBters, a.rdently embraced the new truths. In her
mind this heavenly seed found a congenial soil. Her
early habits of devotion and communion with her
Heavenly Father ha.d fully prepared her spirit for
the reception of the New Church Doctrine of the
Lord, which, in the One Person of Jesus, brings the
Divine Object of worship so near to the mind j while
her long continued course of self.examination and
strict self-watchfulness, and combat with her own
heart, had made it easy for ber to accept and take tu
14 llEMOIR.

her bosom the pure Doctrine of Life, which inculcates


the necessity of self-combat and self-conquest, as
the great means of preparation for heaven. Rer
habituaI study, too, of the Roly 8criptures, her
longing to understand their full meaning, her know-
ledge of their difficulties, rendered most welcome
and delightful to her that opening of the internaI
sense, which is able to remove aIl the obscurities of
the letter, and to cause the whole W ord to shine
with a heavenly light. And finally, her habits of
piOUB meditation and spiritual contemplation, her
frequent lookings upward and inward towards the
heavenly world, her longings to know the nature of
that state which the Good Creator ha<! provided for
man's eternal home,-made her eager to understand
and quick to perceive the rational beauty of those
clear and full revelations concerning the spiritual
world, which the Lord, at this His Second Coming,
has vouchsafed to mankind. In this great treasury
of spiritual truths, a new life-study seemed opened
to her; and she hastened, with aIl the ardor of an
enthusiastic nature, to devote herself to the investi-
gation. She saw that the Lord had thrown a new
and bright light upon the path of her life,/and she
went forward rejoicing in its rays; and thfough me
weIl knew that many needful crosses and,..,-rials yet
awaited her, in the process of her regene':ation, yet
,
\
)
MEMOm. 15

she felt that the Comforter had now come, which


would BUstain her through them aU.
It was a few years after this important event
in her life, that she became acquainted with Mr.
S. Jackson Prescott, her future husband. He
was the younger son of Dr. Oliver Prescott, an
eminent ,physician of Groton, Massachusetts,-
brother to Colonel William Prescott, the brave
commander of the American troops at the battle
of Bunker's Hill." Mr. Prescott, after graduating
with distinction at Harvard University, had pre-
pared himself for the profession of the law; but
being unable, through a defect in his hearing, to
pursue the practice, he turned his attention to
mercantile pursuits, in which he became very suc-
cessfuI.
They were married in the year 1804, and settled
in Boston. A new sphere of duties now opened
upon Mrs. Prescott, aU of which she sought to dis-
charge with her accustomed diligence, conscientious-
ness, and reliance on Divine Providence. And, ere
long, she had need of aU her religious trust to
sustain her under trill,ls and adversities. The loss
of a little daughter, the third child, sank deep into

• A biographieal notice of Dr. Preseott, as also of Col. PreseaU,


may be seen in the Enryclopœdia A mericunu. The distinguished
historian, William H. Preseott, is a grandson of the latter.
· 16 MEMOIR.

her tender nature: but she now found the great


consolations which the pure and clear doctrines of
the New Dispensation particularly aH'ord on occasion
of bereavements such as this. Learning from those
Doctrines the great truth of the Lord's perfeet good-
ness and Fatherly tenderness,-that the one end
which He had in creation was to form a heaven of
human beings, whom He might bless with eternal
happiness,-and that all, without exception, who
die in infancy and childhood, are received into that
heaven and become angels; being enabled, too, by
means of the clear and full descriptions of the
spiritual state given by the New Church Doctrines,
to form a distinct idea of the heavenly home to
which her child had been taken, she could lift up her
thoughts to that higher world, that "better land,'~
and behold her darling in the care of guardian
angels, led by them through gardens of beauty,
taught by them aH heavenly truth with more than
a parent's power or even than a parent's love, and
preparing thus to become herself an angel, a happy
dweHer in the heavens. With these thoughts, she
felt a consolation come to her heart, a balm to her
bosom; she felt her mind altogether lifted above
the thoughts of death and the grave, to life and
eternity; and, in time, she was enabled to rejoice at 1
1
having been made the. honored instrument of adding 1

--- --.-_J
HEMOIR. 17

one to the heavenly hosto At tm:es, indeed, tender


reco11ections would come over her; and, years after,
me would repeat, with a mother's fond particular-
ity, the sentences and exclamations which the little
prattler had uttered in her last ijlness. But though
with tenderness, yet it was without sadness or
regret, that she reca11ed these circumstances. She
could not~ wish her child back again to earth; she
only was anxions so to live as to rejoin her, byand
by, in the heavens.
But trials of a different kind awaited her. For
many years Mr. Prescott was greatly prospered in
bis mercantile undertakings; and, having acquired a
considerable property, was about making prepara-
tions to retire from business to bis paternal estate
. at Groton, to spend the remainder of his days in
literary leisure,-when the embargo and second
war with Great Britain came on, suddenly reduc-
ing him, with hundreds of other prosperous mer-
chants, 1A;> the verge of ruin. It required a11
Mrs. Prescott's fortitude and conjugal devotion, to
BUpport her husband under these severe reverses.
Born and brought up in afRuence, he felt the stroke,
which swept his property entirely from him, as one
exceedingly hard to bear. At this trying time,
:Mrs. Prescott's religious trust, her habit of depend-
ence on Divine Providence, her faith in the perfect
18 HEMOIB.

love and parental care of her Heavenly Father,


which,originally strong, had been so greatly deep-
ened by the teachings of the New Church doctrines,
were caUed fully into operation: and they were aU
needed. Often has the writer heard her say, that
but for the support afforded her by the New Church
doctrines, in the bright and cheering views and
heavenly consolations which they communicate, she
should not have been able to endure the load which
at this time, and indeed long artel', pressed upon her.
And it may be said that it was her gratitude for this
support and comfort, and her ardent conviction
of the blessings which a wider knowledge of those
Doctrines would confer upon mankind, which in-
duced her to undertake the composition of the little
Treatise contained in the following pages. For it
was in the very midst of these trials and troubles
that this work was written. It was published in
the year 1817. How far the writer's ardent wishes
have been accomplished,-how many minds may
have been led by its pemsal to the rich fountains
of truth, whence it had itself proceeded but as a
little stream,-is known only to the Omniscient One.
No society of the New Church as yet existed in
Boston, and but two in the whole country, those,
namely, of Baltimore and Cincinnati. There were,
however, a few receivers of the doctrines in Bos-
f MEMOIR. 19

ton, New York, and Philadelphia, and with many


of these Mrs. Prescott had acquaintance or held
correspondence. She also corresponded with the
Rev. John Clowes, of Manchester, England. And
her intelligence and zeal in the cause were generally
known andjustly appreciated throughout the narrow
bounds of what then constituted the visible New
Church. In 1818, the" Boston Society of the New
Jerusalem" was formed, consisting at first of only
twelve members, of whom Mrs. Prescott was one.
That Society has,since grown and flourished, till it
'is now the largest New Church Society existing,
numbering .at the present time between four hundred
and five hundred members.
Mm Prescott, through her whole life, was a great
BUfferer, both physically and mentally. She was
subject to palpitation of the heart, which at times
ca.used her great distress, and once or twice brought
her to the verge of the grave. She endured, too,-
as every true follower of the Lord must-deep inter-
na.l temptation. Being' of an exceedingly spiritual
and interior charaeter, her temptations were of a
corresponding depth and intensity. But she weIl
knew that they were permitted for her purification
and regeneration; and she meekly bowed her head
to the stroke, striving to sayever, "Lord, not my
will, but thine, be done." At length, the hour of
20 KEKOIR.

her relea.se came. On the 4th day of August, 1841,


after a period of deep distress, both of mind and
body, she p&!8ed away from earth, in the 67th year
of her age. The battle. of life was fought, the victory
won j and we are sure that she is now inheriting
the promises made to those that overcome: "To him
that overcometh, will l give to eat of the tree of life
which is in the midst of the paradise of God j"
"He that overcometh shall inherit all things." She
has entered upon those heavenly felicities which the
revelations made to the New Church so clearly and
charmingly describe, and which she so delighted ta
contemplate in prospect. She haB, doubtless, long
ere this, found that angelic society with which her
spirit was connected even while here on earth j she
has entered into full and blessed companionship
with the spirits of the jnst made perfect, her fel-
low-angelsj she is enjoying that blessed light and
warmth that flow directly from the eternal Sun of
Righteousness, the Lord himself: a glorions ex-
istence of love and bliss now spreads itself before
her, and she has begun the joyons race that knows
no end.
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

CHAPT ER J.

INTRODUCTORY.

THEBE is a mode of reasoning, which has long, we


believe, been more prevalent than any other in the
scientific world, which is that of proceeding from
affects to caUBel!. This mode of reasoning is, doubt-
less, predicated on the very natura! ground, that a
mu1tiplicity of effects is always exhibited before us,
the causes of which are tota1ly unknown; this world
being literally and truly, in itself, a world of effects.
A consequence of this mode of reasoning has, natu-
rally, been that of endeavouriug to clear the way
to causes, by striving to ascertain what they were
not; thus hopiBg, by many negatives, to discover
IIOmething positive. That tills is often, to say the
leaet, a deceptive and illusory mode of reasoning, is
preved by the manY false hypotheses which have been
its inevitable result. It has, we presume, proceeded
from a radical error into which man is naturally
prone to fall, but which Revelation alone Clin in-
form him is really an error. This is nothing le88
22 RELIGION AND PHILOBOPHY UNITED.

than the belief, that man possesses in himself a


life distinct from that of his Maker, when he is, in
truth, but an organ receptive of life from its only
true Source. Feeling a powerful conviction, from
the sense of his real existence, that life lB his own
perfect property, he is led to think, also, that his
powers are truly his own, and thence that in him-
self originates thought. From this belief it is easy
for him ta infer, that in himself also rests the power
of discovering the true causes of the numerous
effects displayed around him. But if ~an would
truly humble himself, and intellectually look up
and refiect, that as there is, as there can be, but One
Source of Life-so would he surely see, that from
that Source must issue the knowledge of aU true
causes; and that they can be communicated to man
hy Revelation alone, though varying, perhaps, in
kind and degree. As from one ,cause, .however,
numerous and varied effects continually proceed,
man need not suppose, that because real causes are
to be found in God alone, that there is nothing left
for the exercise of his noble powers. Believing the
fact, and looking ta the Author of his existence and
continual subsistence, for the first link in every
chain, he will flnd abundant and delightful exer-
cise for those powers, in deducing various particu-
lars from one general idea; and in tracing the cause
in the successive effects down ta his own natural
perceptions of the variously beautiful objects dis-
played in the world and universe around him.
The assertion may, perhaps, be deemed a bold
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 23

one, that "man is but an organ receptive of life


from the Lord." But let us inquire, What is life 1
How came it into our possession 1 And by what
means is it preserved 1 Ând the more minute, the
more thoroûgh, the investigation of this subject,
the more fully, we believe, will it appear, that it is
indeed an error, to suppose that man possesses any
thing of life in himself, separately from, or indepen-
dently of, his Maker. The mode of reasoning, how-
ever, adopted on this occasion, must be from causes
to effects, and not vice Vfffsa; we must, therefore,
commence from some revealed truth, and he led by
that truth, through its regular consequences, to the
result, which observation and experience point out.
By this process, perceiving the truth in its fulneSkl
and power, we shall no longer doubt the propriety
of reasoning thus, or the truth of the proposition,
that "man has not life independently in himself."
On this aH important axiom, rests, we believe, much
of true wisdom. But this is only one of the many
portentous truths, that are now presented to man-
kind; and in the following pages, it is humbly
hoped that this method of tracing the finger of
God through some of the numerous wonders of
creation, will evince itself as a true and happy
Dleans of bringing man to a more perfect acquaint-
ance with the Âuthor and constant Supporter of
ms existence, and of educing a more clear and
complete system of his own nature, powers, and
duties, than has ever before been presented to his
comprehension.
24 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

But as we have above observed that Revelation


cau alone infonn man of the true cause and manner
of his own existence, we shall probably he expected
to sta.te wherein we find the information that
"man is an organ, receptive of life from the Lord."
W e hesitate not to say, and humbly hope we are
prepared to meet the coasequences, that we find it
in the "spiritual sense of the Sacred Scriptures,"
revealed to that faithful and meek servant of the
Lord J eBUS Christ, Emanuel Swedenborg, who, by
a regular and powerful train of reasoning, does truly
and fully prove, that "God" is indeed "with us."
Long have we desired to see these important
worka translated from their purely spiritual into a
more natural language; and thus accommodated to
the more general understanding of mankind at the
present day. But to the accomplishment of this,
we believe, higWy useful and very beneficial work,
there are opposed many very formidable obstacles.
A popular cry, almost terrific in a rational
age, of "enthusiast," "visionary," everywhere pre-
cedes the volumes of Swedenborg. That he was
granted supernatural information respecting astate
of existence superior to the present life, is noised
abroad in tenns of ridicule by those, who may, per-
haps, have felt little interest in an inquiry into the
very important object of this information. Finding
this astonishing daim really made by a philoso-
phical author, at this enlightened period of the
world, when instruction from our Heavenly Father
is considered so totally unnecessary, many sincere
RELIGION A.'ID PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 25

seekers and powerful judges of truth have been


deterred from farther inquiry, by the immediate
and premature conclusion, that none but a deceiver
or self-deceived man could think of making such
a pretension. Some there are, however, who have
gone a little farther. In a rational pursuit of theo-
logical truth, they have ventured to dip into these
volumes as they have occasionally fallen in their
way. Such persons being disgusted by an apparent
crudeness in the author's cOlnmunications (the neces-
aitY of which is easily explained), a singularity in
the style, or a seeming obscurity in the sense, have
found this disgust, aided by a previous prejudice,
quite sufficient to satisfy the slight interest excited;
and they, too, have thrown them aside, as nothing
worth. Thus, have these treasures been buried in
the earth! Respecting the author's knowledge of
the spiritual world, it were weIl, perhaps, to remem-
ber, that there have been many periods during the
course of time, when apparently "new things nuder
the suu" were permitted to take place among llIen.
The age of exterua1 miracles has doubtless past
away j but in these works is exhibited a species of
internaI or spiritual miracle, absolutely new and
truly astonishing. An extent of intellectual infor-
matidn is spread before the attentive reader, far
exoeeding any thing that science bas heretofore pre-
sented, or the human mind was capable of conceiving
without supernatura.l aidj the trnth of which in-
formation is morally demonstrated in its wonderful
display. The mind of man, generally speaking,
c
26 RELIGION AND PHIWSOPHY uNITED.

under the blessing of Heaven ever tending upward


in its progress, is, we conceive, making continuaI
advances in knowledge; and every new acquisition
adds greatly to its capability of advancing. The
revelation, therefore, now made to man, is snch as
he never could have borne at any former period; and
contains such "things" as our blessed Saviour " had
to say" to the disciples, but which they, on ea.rth,
" could not bear."
On a deliherate, patient, and thorough examina-
tion of the communications made to the world by
Swedenborg (the writing and publishing of which
in the original Latin, wholly and fully occupied
about thirty years of the author's life), snch a grand
spectacle of new, yet decidedly important principles,
is presented to the human understanding, that it
should soom they need but to he thoroughly com-
prehended to be cordially received, and with hum-
ble yet awful admiration. How then, may he the
very natural query, can we account for the pheno-
menon, that even simple, unlettered minds can
enter into the depths and subtilty of those com-
mandingly grand, yet exquisitely refined prilllciples,
while the man of extensive erudition, the elegant
classical scholar, the deep-read theologian, the acute
philosopher, and the truly rational moralillt, find
themselves repulsed at the very entrance of this
Mansion of Glories 1 It is at this very fountain of
reasons, and this only, that the above enigma can
und a solution; and in this system we may find a
full, a satisfactory elucidation of this, and every
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 27

other species of intellectual phenomena. It is this


heaven-derived power of unfolding the heretofore
inexplicable secrets of the creation j of developing
the innumerable mysteries with which science at
every step continually presents its votaries j of
tmcing the blessed connection between the glorious
Creator and every possible form and degree of his
works, that stamps the signature of Divinity on this
precious message! It is from this glorious light,
which is now permitted to beam forth from the
interior of the sacred W ord of God, that every real
part of its literaI sense is now rescued from the
obscurity into which a large portion of its contents
wss fast falling j and that it is once again preparing
to become the delight, the glory, and on earth the
Heavenly Sanctuary of man.
That this is not the vision of a diseased ima-
gination, but a substantial view of truth, time only
can demonstrate. But it belongs to the cool calcu-
!ator, and not to the warm philanthropist, to wait
-for the slow progress of time to unfold the promise
of new and transcendant joys to man! The living
CUITent of Christian charity circulating in the heart,
strongly impels its real possessor to impart to his
fellow-creatures every good in possession, or even in
anticipation. But should the attainment of a great
good in prospect, depend in a considerable measure
on the knowledge and efforts of the candidates for
its reception, how would a belief of this condition
stimulate the real believer to make known the" glad
tidings of great joy," and urge on his brethren the
28 RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED.

importance of seelcing for this "pearl of great priee."


That such a pearl bas really been for nearly half a
century within the reach of thousa.nds of mankind,
who have given no attention to it, it may appear,
perhaps, like presumption to assert. But if among
those thousands, can be found even one who will
now listen to the friendly information, and apply
the test of his own observation and experience to
ascertain its truth, the writer of these pages will
esteem such an effect a full compensation for this
mental effort" and offer to the Fountain of all good
sincere gratitude for such a degree of success.
CHAPTER Il.

ENDEAVOURING TO PROVE THREE PROPOSITIONS.

PROPOSITION FIRST.-That aU trne principles, spring-


ing from one only Eternal Source, must be found to
harmonize with the observation and experience of
the wisest among mankind in aU ages.
It is equivocaUy acknowledged by every rational
mind, that trnth can have but one eternal source;
yet that source, being also infinite, must emit innu-
merable and ever varying, because diverging rays
or principles, in which that source is traced and
acknowledged through the beautiful harmony by ,
which they coalesce with and illustrate each other;
therefore, though ever varying, they a.re never op-
posing, like light and darkness, black and white.
Thus trnth appears to man in infinitely diversmed
forms, exercising his powers in the investigation of
its nature and its uses. We universaUy find that
exercise produces strength: by use, therefore, the
powers of man expand and increase, and become
more and more largely recipient of those Divine
rays which illumine bis souI.
On. taking an enlarged view of the state of the
human rÎlind, at the present period of the world,
30 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

who can doubt that the aggregate portion of know-


ledge now enjoyed, very far surpasses that which
has ever been possessed by mankind in any former
period 1 Ever making new discoveries, new acqui-
sitions, the old are rarely, we believe it may be said
are never, whoUy lost. Thus, though there have
been periods when the clarkness of ignorance and
superstition seemed to envelope the world; yet,
these have been succeeded by others of so much
greater light and information, as to unfold the
hidden treasures of the darkest ages; and prove to
the refiecting mind, that the temporary night was
only to prepare for a more effulgent clay. In this
view of the subject,· then, we think it evidently
appears, that the world at large, like its inhabi-
tants, each in particular, has its graduaJ progres-
sions from infancy towards maturity; who shaH
say when the latter periud has arrived, and that
its motion must be retrograde 1
But it may be asked, in what consist these gra-
duaI progressions of the world 1 We answer, in
the discovery and application of apparently new
principles, or additional rays of truth. ls it
queried, how we ascertain that these principles
have not been known and lost 1 We answer, that
no principles of truth can be absolutely new in them-
selves, being from an eternal and self-existent foun-
tain; but that some of them may, even now, be new .
to the mind of man, is, we think, moraJly proved,
by the order and tenacity of that mind in seizing
and retaining any degree of real knowledge; also,
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 31

in our love of diffusing or imparting our mental


acquisitions.
,There are, in individuals, widely different and.
even opposite motives for this desire; but the resuit
is the same, that of increasing the aggregate of
hurnan knowledge. ls it farther inquired, how we
distinguish and ascertain the true from the faise
principles, many of which, we are informed, are
abroad in the world 1 We answer, that true prin-
ciples are fixed and substantial; the false are ever
changing and illusory. The true will thus he
found to coincide and harmonize with those already
known and acknowledged by the observation and
experience of the wisest among mankind; while
the faIse· are examined and rejected at the same
tribunal.
PROPOSITION SECOND.-Whenever, therefore, the
ardent intellect of industrious man discovers prin-
ciples apparently new, they may he fairly tried by
an appeal to the enlightened understanding of his
fellow-men, and will deservedly stand or fall by the
decision consequent on such an appeal.
If, then, aU true principles spring from one
source, we have only to inquire, when new prin-
ciples present themselves, whether they bear the
stamp of this Almighty Rand. And to determine
this important point, they must he submitted to
the critica.l ordeai of the collected wisdom of all
past ages. Mankind, then, are to sift, to anaIyze,
and to explore such principles, to examine their
inmost nature and tendency; to try them by OPPO-
32 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY LNITED.

Rition, by coalition, by every process which may he


devised; and if, after this thorough and elaborate
investigation, no flaw or imperfection cau he dÏs-
covered, they have surely weIl stood this Hery
ordeal, and may be pronounced true. During this
critical cross-examination, however, vast must he
the variety of opinions entertained respecting these
principles; for each individual who thinks at aIl,
will think for himself, and form his own conclu-
sions according to the degree of light he himself
cnjoys. No two, therefore, will make up precisely
the same judgment, for no two can view the B8:rne
object, at the same moment, and through the Barne
medium, from the same point. But the human
mind is, we have' reason to think, never stationary.
Though often apparently at rest, it is never truly
so, but is gradually and often, imperceptibly chang-
ing its views of the same object; and, at length, on
examining opinions supposed to have been firmly
fixed, we find ourselves under the necessitJ of
acknowledging a decided change. Should any dis-
covery of new principles. then, purport important
advantages to mankind, "though an host should
encamp against them," if trne, there would he
found powerful advocates; the wisdom of the wise
would carefully examine, the simplicity of the sim-
ple would readily receive, them. By the former,
they would be discovered to harmonize with the
known and acknowledged axioms of the west
among mankind of aIl past ages; and by the latter,
to agree with the substantial, though unexamined
RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED. 33

sentiments which ha<! led them in the paths of


peace from their youth upward. On the conttary,
should such principles, however specious their ex-
terior, be intrinsically false, the truly wise would
not be long deceived; they wo~ld not rest till the
hidden mischiefs were discovered, the charm dis-
solved, and the hypothetical principles dissipated
in air.
PROPOSITION THIRD.-That there are apparently
new principles unfolded by Emanuel Swedenborg,
which are, at the present period of the world,
offered to this ordeal. And that the appeal may
he the more clear and direct to the enlightened
understanding of man, the philosophical principles
are, in this "attempt," in a measure separated from
the religious doctrines contained in these works,
and presented at one view; that the judgment of
the ingenuous examiner may act with cool impar-
tiality, and thus render the decision, whether in
their favour or otherwise, complete.
It bas not been the happiness of every age of the
world, to reap the vast advantages which result
from the development of important principles. So
dense has been the mist of ignorance and corrup-
tion, which haB widely extended over the inhabi-
tants of the world at some periods of time, as to
render the human mind, for a season, almost im-
pervious to the rays of trnth. Yet, so vast in
number are the l><>ints of absolute knowledge now
in the possession oi man, that he bas varions means
of trying any theory that may be 8Uggested. That
34 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY WUTED.

new combinations of thought are continually pre-


senting new results, is also, we presume, beyond a
doubt. What, then, of the novel and wonderful
may not be offered to our consideration, it is impos-
sible to 'OSly. It is time, we may conclude, to resign
the puerile habit of circumscribing the range of
human intellect,--of limiting that, which in its
essence is illimitable, as partaking the nature of
its infinite source. Much real hu~ty, then, and
patient investigation are necessary to the success of
every sincere inquirer after important truths. The
impatient desire to arrive at conclusions before the
premises are thoroughly examined, weighed, and'
understood, is too natura! to the human mind; and
is continually preventing deductions, which might
he just, decisive, and therefore permanent. To
"learn to wait," is one of the hardest lessons given
to man; yet nothing can be done well which is
done impatiently. As the perception and acknow-
ledgment, or the rejection or neglect of substantial
principles of truth, is a most momentous concern in
the life of man, it surely behoves him to he cau-
tiously on his guard, whenever his attention is
turned to this portentous work. That the present
is a period of this nature, is known to thousands,
in various parts of the world, who have bean blessed
with the ability and inclination to examine and
thence perceive the solid foundation of those prin-
ciples. But how to produce in others that mental
state of calm, candid, humble, and patient inquiry,
which is absolutely necessary, as preparatory to
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 35

such a perception, is the subjeet of doubt and diffi-


culty.
That the spirit of the Supreme is the only effec-
tuaI operator in this blessed work, we· weIl know.
But that the Divine blessing must descend through
human, voluntary instruments, is no less certain;
JI.Ild that himself may he thus honoured, is the
ardent though humble desire of every sincere reci-
pient of Divine trnth.
That there are apparently' new and highly im-
portant principles unfolded by Emanuel Swedenborg,
can he known only to those who have thoroughly
explored the invaluable treasures of spiritual truth
whi.ch he has presented to the world. To those,
thiB foot is beyond all doubt. But it would he of
no use to any one to helieve this upon the assertion
of others, as sueh persons would rest on human
authority, whieh is no actual belief of the mind.
This can he useful, indeed, so far as to dispose the
minù to patient researeh; and proportionate to this,
where no other impediment arises, will be the
degree of success in obtaining a rational conviction
of the understanding respeeting those prineiples.
To mankind at large, however, they were, "by their
author, conscientiously subrnitted. They are now
paatling the ordeal of human investigation. Persons
of all degrees of rnind, from the most simple and
unlearned to the most highly cultivated and intelli-
gent, are earnestly desired "to pause, to ponder,"
to sifi and to weigh them; only rememhering the
deep solemnity of the work, anù the importance of
36 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

imploring for themselves the gracious aid of a


spirit of candour, humility, and firm rationality in
this interesting investigation. By the final decision
of mankind, which must be consonant with that of
the Supreme, they must necessarily stand or faIl
If .they diffuse, indeed, the glorious rays of Divine
truth, "the gates of hell cannot prevail against
them." The mind of man win be gradually pre-
pared to receive and refiect them, by gratitude,
obedience, and joy, wj.th ap their delightful train of
effects. If they are the works of darkness, they
will soon be overthrown and destroyed for ever.
One objeet is contemplated by the writer of thia
little work, which, if accomplished, will serve, it
is hoped, as a preparatory step to many rational
minds in the investigation of these works. T'he
system, it is well known, is professedly a religious
one. Its object is to mise its votary to a high
degree of excellence in religious knowledge, con-
duct, and worship. But religious exaltation. has
ever, heretofore, been of so doubtful, and therefore
dangerous a character! Its pretended foundations,-
that wild superstition, which disgraces the pages of
ecclesiastical history; that cruel fanaticism, which
had well nigh given a death-blow to Christianity,-
these, its foundations, have been so baseless, if we
may be aIlowed the expression, and it has reared a
superstructure, in the monastic life, so grotesque
and useless, so gloomy and deformed, that it bas
left on the minds of aIl spectators disgust and
abhorrence, or contempt. How, then, are we to
RELIGION A,'W PHILOSOPIIY UNITED. 37
proye that we shall exhibit a more substantial or
life-breathing fOrIll of holy symmetry1 How (to
change the figure) shall we prove that ours is a
"city not made with hands, whose Maker and
Builder is God 1" We can do it only by showing
and explaining in what manner "God's footstool is
the earth; that His holy City, the New J erusalem,
hath its foundations here; that the solid principles
uf pure and. genuine philosophy form the eternal
basis on which it rests; and that those principles of
philosophy will be more and more confirmed and
consolidated in the Inind, the more minute and closer
the investigation of every reasoning inquirer. In
order ta this, then, we would once more observe,
that the object of the present undertaking is to
collect and place in a prOIninent point of view, the
peculiar phiiosophical principles which really consti-
tute this foundation of the New J erusalem Church;
and to show, by the blessing of God, that they are,
indeed, a full and sufficiently substantial foundation,
on which the eternal hope of man may l'est.
CHAPT ER III.

ON THE PHILOSOPHICAL PIUNCIPLES IN GENERAL,


UNFOLDED IN THE SYSTEM OF SWEDENBORG.

" Can man, by searcbing, find out God ?"

lT bas already been intimated in the introductory


chapter, that right reasoning must proceed from
causes ta effects; that causes, existing alone in the
Supreme Being, must be made known ta man by
revelation. It being now thus made known, that the
glory which for ever emanates from and surrounds
the Eternal Being, forms really and substantially
a Spiritual Sun, which warms and irradiates the
intellectual creation,-we find, clearly deduced from
this truth, the following rational result: that the
heat f1.owing from this Sun is in its essence divine
love; and the light, divine wisdom. Thât from
this spiritual light and heat, the natural or material
sun, with its light and heat, solely derives its power
and efficacy.
That all worlds, or combinations of worlds in
systems, derive their existence and subsistence from
one eternal and infinite source, is acknowledged
by every rational mind. For, surely, if there ever
existed a real atheist, he must be either wholly
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 39

destitute of understanding, or possess one so blinded


or perverted, as to be wholly useless on this subject.
That the sun of our system has, then, the same
derivation and continuaI support, is beyond a doubt;
but in what manner this wonderful work is accom-
plished, is a problem, which has ever heen deemed
heyond the power of the human intellect to solve,
or the human understanding to conceive. And if
they have gone one step farther than a mere know-
ledge of the sun's origin, and said, it is done by the
word of God's power, the same question "how~" re-
curs, and brings the subject to the same issue. Ras
there not heen a period in the life of man (that
period when the Copernican system was first pre-
sented to the world), when it was thought a diffi-
cultY of perhaps equal magnitude to reconcile the
sun's apparent motion and real rest ~ Yet it is now
as generally received and understood as any princi-
pIe of common knowledge. That the sun was created
a perfect type, an imitator, as it were, of its glori-
OUS Author, and like the hand of a dial, constantly
guided by, and pointing out His movements, is, we
l1umbly undertake to support, a truth which may
he proved by the philosophicai principles, that are,
by Emanuel Swedenborg, first presented to the com-
prehension of man. We say philosophical princi-
pIes, because upon these premises is raised a system,
apparently new, which must necessarily stand or
fall with them. Therefore, whether this he a true
or false philosophy, is the point to he now decided
by 0001 examination.
40 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

That the specific nature of heat and light, fiowing


from the sun's body, and meeting our senses of feel-
ing and sight, has never been fully comprehended
by man in his fallen state, will, we trust, he unequi-
voca.lly acknowledge~ But as there are, at pre-
sent, in the human mind, many obstacles to the
reception of truth, it will not, perhaps, be so readily
granted that this natural heat and light 80lely
derive their nature, their specific power and effi-
cacy, from spiritual heat and light, which are
essential love and wisdom, fiowing continually from
the Supreme Being: in other words, that from the
Supreme Being constantly fiows, or emanates, a
glorious sphere of light and heat, which, in their
essence, are divine love and wisdom, whence origi-
nate the power and efficacy df the light and heat
of the natural or material sun, thus created a type,
and refiecting back, by perfect correspondence, the
image of its great Original Is not this, we would
humbly ask, a clear and satisfactory elucidation of
the important, but hitherto mysterious and lately
disputed union of spirit and matter 1 "God is a
Spirit," saith the W ord of truth. It is the nature
of spirit, if we may so spaak, to diffuse itse1f. This
diffusion causes a sphere of glory around the Su-
preme Being. The emanating sphere of this glori-
ous spirit, then, forming and operating in and
through the material suns of the various natural
systems, produced, and constantly supports in ex-
istence, the wonderful creation: thus descending,
by degrees, from the Great First Cause, to the
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 41

loweBt extreme of external nature. In this descent,


we perceive that varioUB degrees of spirit find their
abode in varioUB forInS of matter.
This conception of a sphere, together with that
of spiritual degrees, form two of the new and im-
portant prïnciples, which are, in this age, first pre-
sented to the test of human wisdom. Let us hope,
then, that they will he brought to an open, candid,
and thorough examination; that they may he duly
appreciated, and take their final station, accordingly,
in the circle of knowledge.
Who will doubt, that in the natural sun, which
proximately produces and supports in existence all
the wonders of this our natural worlp, there is a
goodly portion of this living tire, this self-existent
Spirit, this divine union of wisdom and love 1-
Yet who but will acknowledge a vastly greater de-
gree of this same all-pervading spirit in the rational
soul of man 1 Herein the principle, also, of spiritual
degrees, is acknowledged; and its beautiful effects
caTI only he known by tracing the Barne principle
"through nature up to nature's God;" which is
strikingly done by His own glorious hand, in th!,
development He bas made of Himself to man, in
the works of His servant, Emanuel Swedenborg.
St. Paul's three heavens are there discovered to blj

• That the writer cannot here mean, as might at fil'!lt aight


.ppear, that there is !ife in the natural sun itself, is plain from
..bat is afterwarda saiù (p. 47), that the sun is but dead matter.
The meaning intended is, doubtleaa, that the material sun is the
tirat effcd of !ifc from the self· existent Spirit.-EDITOB.
D
42 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

three degrees of the spirit, or emanating sphere of


God, existing in various recipient forms, which, thus
receiving, transmit their reflected beams of intelli-
gence, in ardent emotions of gratitûde and love.
The same glorious spirit, descending in smaller
degrees, forms the souI of man, and the externa1
perfections of nature in her three kingdOIns, ani-
mal, vegetable, and mineraI; giving to each itB
peculiar degree of life, in proportion to their capa-
city of receiving that eInanating spirit of the Great
Author of all things.
There is one more important principle, which
is so linked or interwoven with the two above-
mentioned, that we find ourselves under the neces-
"ity of touching on that also, before we.. attempt to
explain more fully or to illustrate either. This is
the principle of correspondence, which, in its devel-
opment, forms a most striking and positive moral
proof, that the whole creation, as it springs from its
fountain, the Deity, is a legitimate effect from itB
glorious cause, in contradistinction from a mere
arbitrary work produced by an Almighty hand.
We shall find, we humbly trust, in the explanation
and illustration of these three grand principles,
much substantial instruction and much deep wis-
dom. May we be blessed in the endeavour of
developing them to the reception of the understand-
ings, and rendering them interesting to the hearts,
of our attentive readers !
CHAPTER IV.

ON THE PRINCIPLE OF SPHERES, AS UNFOLDED IN


THE COMMUNICATIONS OF SWEDENBORG.

So numerous are the evils arising from a false idea


predicated on a true principle, or in other words,
from the misunderstanding of such a principle, that
it is highly important to guard, if possible, against
this prolific source of pain. It bas, we helieve, been
an idea of many persons, probably arising from a
misapprehension of the eternal unity of God, that
the blessed Author of all creation is an "wni1)(1T'sa1
ens, or central fire, destitute of all form 1" That
this (as we esteem it) false, pernicious, and ground-
letl8 idea, may not he encouraged by any thing that
bas here been advanced, we would add a word of
explanation. To exclude the very natura! thought,
that because the material sun being a globular body,
and, st the BaIne time, u. type of the spiritual sun,
that that glorious luminary, which is asserted to he
the fountain of life, is also s globular body of
spiritual fire, we must endeavour to give, from the
new revelation, some elucidation of this very im-
portant point. We are informed, then, that the
error herein (which i.tI surely u. very natura! one)
44 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

has arisen 'entirely from supposing the spiritual sun


to be the Supreme Being Himself, when it is, in
reality, only that emanating sphere of His divine
and essential constituents, love and wisdom; as the
material sun's light and heat are not the real body,
but only an emanation from it. N ow, let any re-
flecting and rational man inquire of himself, if, in
the inmost thought of his soul, he can conceive of a.
God without a form! Clion he even try to fix his
thought on any possible thing, without its imme-
diately presenting itself to his intellectual vision,
in a form ~ Clion any essence exist without a form ~
Does it not, then, appear almost like profanity, to
imagine the Deity in a globular or any other form
than the human ~ If we cannot think intently on
God without imagining him in a form,...,...if the human
is the most perfect form ever presented to our
imaginations, and we are continuaIly, in the W ord
of God, enjoined to "keep God always before our
eyes," how can we obey this divine injunction, but
by thinking of him as a Divine Ruman Being ~
Clion it be conceived possible, tha,t supreme wisdom,
which embraces every variety and degree of know-
ledge, could exist and operate the wonderful works
of creation, without the various instrumental powers
with which man, in humble imitation of his Maker,
brings that knowledge into action or use ~ Clion it
be possible to believe, that perfect, divine love,
which is surely a complex source of aIl the bene-
volent affections, can exist and diffuse itself over
creation, without form, or in any other than that of
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 45

a Divine Ruman form 1 That the common sense of


man acknowledges this essential trnth, and pro-
claims it, is, in a measure, proved by the manner
of worship and addI;ess to Him, from the people of
ail nations and ages. Do we not universaUy ascriOO
to Him, as the Parent of creation, all the powers,
both intel1ectual and personal, which properly 00-
long to man 1 Yet knowing Him to be infinite and
eternal, the "Alpha and Omega," "without OOgin-
ning of Jays or end of years," we cannot doubt,
that our derivation from Him as a parent, and our
subsistence in and through Him aschildren, must
he of a kind altogether different from our natu-
ra! conceptions on these subjects. Accordingly
we find, on investigation, that between spiritual
and natural ideas there is this wide difference:
natura! conceptions are aU confined within the
narrow bounds of space and time, and do not rise
to any thing of spirit: whereas spiritual concep-
tions do not admit into them any thing of time or
space. We can neither measure or weigh, literally,
a thought or feeling. For we can instantaneously,
or in no time, extend any object of mental vision
to immensity, or reduce it to extreme minuteness.
Thus we must raise our ideas above nature, with it8
time and space, into the regions of spiritual light
and life, before we can form any just conception of
the" Father of our spirits," who is himself a Spirit j
,and to approach and resemble whom, we must
worship Rim in "spirit and in trnth." It may
also 00 observed, that were the Supreme Being con-
46 RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED.

ceived ta he in any other than a human form, we


should, doubtless, use the neuter and not the mas-
culine gender in our terms of address ta him. As
we can form no conception, then, of a gloriously
good, and greatly intelligent, Being, in any other
than a human form, and as in his Roly W ord it is
distinctly ass!Jrted, that " Gad made man in his own
image and likeness," it is surely reasonable, it is
surely consonant with true wisdom, ta imagine and
helieve the Supreme Beingto he in a Divinely Ruman
form. In what various and wonderful respects the
divine transcends the merely natural human, is a.
subject tao vast for our present consideration; we
wish only to show, that it harmonizes with the
highest wisdom of aIl past ages, and is, therefore,
worthy ta be considered as established on the firm
ground of undisputed truth.
Respecting, however, the blessed sun of the spi-
ritual world, the glorious sphere of divinely united
love and wisdom, which is for ever emanating from
the Deity, we would make some further observa--
tions. It is, we helieve, a weIl known and estab-
lished fact in natural philosophy, that there is con-
stantly emitted from every created body a somewhat
of itself, which finds a recipient in the atmosphere
that encompasses the earth, and there produces its
degree of use.
That this emission and this consequent use a:re
drawn forth by the benign influence of the sun's
light and heat, is also weIl known and acknow-
ledged. In this natural fact we behold a striking,
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 47

powerful, and interesting emblem or type, and, we


think, a beautiful illustration of the existence and
eternal operation of the spiritual sun, which, ever
diffusing its glorious rays, by its vivifying influence
of love and wisdom, or spiritual' light and heat,
gives life and activity, with the consequent power
of exertion, to every created being. But as the
material sun receives the very power of performing
its uses in the natural world, from the glorious sun
of the spiritual world, there is between the two
luminaries this aIl-important distinction, that the
spiritual sun is replete with perfect life, because
Gad dweIls in its centre j while the natural sun,
having only the appearance of life, is in itself mere
matter, or perfect death. In aIl things which are
proximately brought into life, and supported in
existence by the natural sun, there is only apparent
life, but real death; but in aIl things which are
created and upheld by the immediate influence of
the spiritual sun, there is a principle of eternal life.
The very atmosphere of the spiritual world, fiowing
from the fountain of life, and being consequently
spiritual, is the means of supporting spiritual life
in its recipients; as the atmosphere of the natural
world is a means of the existence and subsistence
of its natural inhabitants. In man, indeed, while
existing on the natural earths, are united the oppo-
site principles of the two suns, which are life and
death, spirit and matter, soul and body. As the
original constituent principles of spiritual life are
love and wisdom, so the absence of these is spiritual
48 RELIGION AND PHLLOSOPHY UNITED.

death. As the pervading influence of the natural


sun's light and heat extends even to the centre oNhe
various earths over which he reigns, drawing from
èvery varied body its responsive effort toward the
general good j so does the glorious sphere of the
spiritual sun diffuse its benign fervors and cheering
light through infinitude, every where pouring its
glories into the willing recipient, and exciting in,
or calling forth from, that recipient, a corresponding
emission of its own degree of received life. Whence
issues, from every intelligent being as well as from
every natural body, a sphere or emanation of its
particular principles or degree of life, which is its
measure of united goodness and truth, derived from
its original and glorious fountain of di vine love and
wisdom, or else the same heavenly principle reduced
and perverted, till at length converted to their
opposites. Finding in outward nature so beautiful
a counterpart to this doctrine of spiritual spheres,
we think it not fanaticism to conclude that it is
founded on a truly philosophical principle. Yet we
have herein given but the germ j in its farther
development and illustration it proves its origin to
the opening mind, like the sun bursting from the
horizon, and gradually reaching its glorious zenith.
CHAPTER V.

ON THE PRINCIPLE OF DEGREES, AS COMMUNICATED


BY THE SAME FAITHFUL MESSENGER.

WE are also informed, that "there are three de-


grees of two kinds," viz., three degrees of love and
three of wisdom, which, fiowing from their Divine
Author, are, if we may so speak, " distinctly one;"
as the divine love and the divine wisdom, which,
unconvertible into each other, and therefore eter-
nally distinct, are yet, in their source, inseparable.
That they are in1a measure separated, or united in
various combinations by their different recipients,
will be perceived as soon as their nature is fully
understood. But we must, for once, allow ourselves
the gratification of using the words of our en-
lightened author, as none other present themselves
in which we can so concentrate bis highly impor-
tant information. He then declares to us, that
"degrees are of two kinds, degrees of altitude and
degrees of latitude. The knowledge of degrees is,
as it were, a: key to open the causes of things, and
enter into them; without this knowledge scarcely
any thing of cause can he known; for the objects
50 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

and subjeets of both worlds, without it, appear sim-


ple, as if there were nothing in them except of a.
nature similar to what is seen with the eye, when,
nevertheless, this, respectively to the things which
lie interiorly concealed, is as one ta thousands, yea,
to myriads. The interior things which lie hid, can
by no means be discovered, unless degrees he under-
stood; for exterior things proceed ta things interior,
and those to the things which are inmost, by de-
grees; not by continuous degrees, but by discrete
degrees. The term continuous degrees is applied to
denote decrements or decreasings from more crass
ta more subtle, or from denser to rarer; or rather
to denote, as it were, the increments and increasings
from more subtle to more crass, or from rarer to
denser, like that of light proceeding to shade, or of
heat ta cold. But discrete degrees are entirely
different, they are as things prior, pasterior, and pas-
treme; or as end, cause, and effect; these are caJled
discrete degrees, hecause the prior is by itself, the
posterior by itself, and the postreme by itself; but
still, when taken tagether, they make one. The
atmospheres from highest ta lowest, or from the
sun to the earth, which are ether and air, are dis-
crete into such degrees; and there are substances,
seemingly simple, the congregate of these atmos-
pheres, and again the congregate of these congre-
gates, which, when taken together, are called a
composite. These last degrees are called discrete,
because they exist distinctly, and are understaod
by degrees of altitude; but the former degrees are
RELIGION AND PHIWSOPHY UNITED. 51

continuous, because they continuously increase, and


are understood by degrees of latitude."
So luminous, to those who are acquainted with
the whole of this wonderful revelation, are the
discoveries made to us, by this heaven-instructed
scribe, that it is hard to find in common language
expressions in which to condense his astonishing
communications. Yet as misapprehension, and a
natural but apparently unfortunate prejudice, have
heretofore closed the avenues to this exhaustless
mine, some valuable specimens of its contents ma.y
excite an honest curiosity in some persons to ex-
plore these regions of ineffable wisdom; whence
they cannot fail of bringing into society impor-
tant additions to their intellectual wealth.
As in every thing, both in the spiritual and natu-
rai worlds, there are three degrees of both these
kinds, this knowledge of degrees is, indeed, in its
development, illustration, and application, a most
important key to treasures, whose intrinsic value
and eminent use can be known only on a thorough,
patient, and candid examination. It is this exam-
iuation which the writer of these pages desires to
induce in the humble and pious mind; fuIly con-
vinced, that the reward will more than counter-
balance the labour. As there are, however, familial'
to every one, many interesting and striking illustra-
tions, which are so many proofs of the reality of this
principle of degrees, it ma.y he useful to present
some of them in li point of light which will evince
their derivation from it. It was intima.ted before,
52 RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED.

that discrete degrees, or degrees of altitude, are


derived one from another, in a series-like end, cause,
and effect. Let us endeavour to "illustrate this by
example. It is known by ocular experience, that
each muscle in the human body consists of very
small fibres, and that these being disposed in fasci-
cles, constitute the larger fibres, which are called
moving fibres, and that from collections of the
latter exists that compound which is called a
muscle. It is the same with nerves; in them, from
very small fibres, are composed larger fibres, which
appear as filaments, and from a collection of these
is a nerve compounded. The case is the same in
other compaginations, confasciations, and collec-
tions, of which the organs and viscera consist; for
these are compositions from fibres and vessels
variously formed by similar degrees. The case is
the same, also, with aIl and every thing of the
vegetable kingdom, and aIl and every thing of the
mineraI kingdom; in the different kinds of wood
there are compaginations of filaments in a threefold
order; in metaIs and stones there are conglobations
of parts, also in a threefold order. From these
considerations it appears what discrete degrees are,
viz., that one is formed t'tom another, and by means
of the other a third, which is called composite; and
that each degree is discrete from another. Renee,
conclusions may be formed respecting those things
which do not appear before our eyes, because the
case is the same with them as with the organic
Rubstances, which are the receptacles and habita-
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 53

tions of the thoughts and affections in the brain;


with the atmospheres; with heat and light, and
with love and wisdom;. for the atmospheres are the
receptacles of heat and light, as heat and light are
receptacles of love and wisdom; of consequence,
sinee there are degrees of atmospheres, there are
also similar degrees of heat and light, and similar of
love and wisdom; for the ratio (particular constitu-
tion and relation) of the latter is not different from
that of the former."
The reasoning. by which our respected Author
connects these degrees in external nature with
their Glorions First Cause, is strikingly conclusive
and beautiful; and not less so his important dis-
tinction between the two kinds of degrees; showing
that much being already known in the world re-
specting continuous degrees, or degrees of latitude,
bis ditlCOveries, or communications respecting the
spiritual world, were not so much connected with
01' dependent on those, as on the explanation of dis-

crete degrees or degrees of altitude, respecting which


mueh greater ignorance prevails.
To concentrate and abridge, and yet render intel-
ligible, the vast mass of information contained in
this luminous and highly important doctrine of
degrees, is a work we hardly clare attempt, yet
know not how to leave unattempted. There are
many deeply interesting points in theology which
it embraces, illustrates, and enforces with ÏITesistible
power, to which no language but that of this
A.uthor could do justice; but which (our present
54 REUGlON AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

object being professedly of a philosophical nature)


are, in a measure, extraneous to our purpose. Not,
indeed, that true philosophy and religion can ever
he really separated, for the former is derived from
the latter, and connected with it by discrete degrees:
in other words, true philosophy is religion exhibited
in ultimate effects. But ll.'l we wish here ta confine
our attention, in a measure, to these exterior or
ultimate degrees of life, as the philosophical founda-
tions of the New Jerusalem Ohurch may he termed,
we will endeavour to give some illustration of this
part of our subject. "That the ultimate degree is
the complex, continent, and basis of the prior de-
grees, appears manifestly from the progression of
ends and causes to effects; that the effect is the
complex, continent, and basis of the causes and ends,
may be comprehended by enlightened reason; but
not so clearly, that the end, with every thing 00-
longing ta it, and the cause with every thing 00-
longing ta it, actually exist in the effect, and that
the effect is the full complex of them. That the
case is 80, may appear from what haB been pre-
mised, and particularly from the following consider-
ations, that one is' from the other in a triplicate
series; and that the effect is nothing else but the
cause in its ultimate; and forasmuch as the ulti-
mate is the complex, it follows that the ultimate is
the continent and the basis. *
As ta what relates
• Bere we see the reasoning, on which is fonnded an idea, hem-
after expressed, that spiritual existences cannot operate in extema!
act, nntil they baye been formed and fixed by an ultimate existence
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 55

to love and wisdom, love is thé end, wisdom the


instrumental cause, and use is the effect j and use
is the complex, continent, and basis of wisdom and
love j and use is Buch a complex ~nd such a con-
tinent, that the whole of love and the whole of
wisdom are actually in it, it heing the simultaneous
existence of them. But it is weU to he observed,
that aU the things of love and wisdom, which are
homogeneous and concordant, exist in use, according
to what was said and shown above."
From this doctrine it appears, then, that matter
is the continent and basis of spirit. The whole
system of nature, one grand effect, containing
within itself its glorious cause and end. Does
not this principle beautifully harmonîze with that
of the 8pheres, a faint sketch of which is given
above 1 Does it not unfold man to himself, and
God to man 1 Does it not correspond with the
general sentiment of the good and wise in aU ages
and nations, that God is in, every thing 1
But there is one additional and important prin-
ciple, the explanation of which may throw BOme
perhaps needed light on what is advanced above.
on sorne natura! earth; and that, of course, all angels and devils
were once natural beings like ourselves. This assertion opens an
extensive field of argument; which is, however, but accomplishing
one abject of the writer. Thus, our blessed Saviour "came Dot 10
IeIld peace but a sword on the earth."
CRAPTER VI.

ON THE PRINCIPLE OF CORRESPONDENCE, AS


DEVELOPED BY THE SAME.

To explain clearly the principle of Correspondence,


is not, we fear, an easy task; but that it really
exists, and is a substantial and highly important
principle in creation, we hope to show by illus-
tration.
Correspondence, we may BaY, arises from that
responsive emission of its individual degree of life,
which every recipient returns to its bountiful
Donor. It is that refiective power which receives
and returns the image of the Great Original; which
receipt and return, though ever the Bame in essence,
are infinite in degrees and in variety, according to
their infinite source, and to their recipient subjects;
thus combining eternal unitYwith illimitable diver-
sity. We have said above, that the heat and light
fiowing from the sun of heaven, the glorious sphere.
ever emanating from the Supreme Being, or the
Divine Proceeding, called in Scripture the Roly
Spirit, is, in its essence, divine love, clothed in
divine wisdom, for heat is within light. This
blessed Spirit, this heavenly Sun, bas, in forming
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 57

man, prepared two receptacles for itself, which are


the will and the understanding; the will receives
the spiritual heat of the divine love, the understalld-
ing the spiritual light of divine wÏsdom. These
receptacles constitute the soul of man. When filled
by the reception of the Roly Spirit, and thus ren-
dered active, they constitute the perfect, the eternal
life of man. But that they may he brought into
action in this world of ultimates, something more
is necessary than the mere will and understanding,
for they can act only in organized forros. Sa far,
they are only spiritual forInS, and can operate only
in the spiritual world or region, nor indeed even
there, until they have been fixed and ultimated in
external nature. They must find their correspond-
ent receptacles in this natural world, by which
they can operate here, before they have power to
develop theIIUlelves in external act. In the heart
and lungs of the human materia1 body, they find
this perfect correspondence. As, however, it is
well known that human life has itsorigin in the
brain, we will quote some passages from our author,
illustrative of this fset in anatomy.
"That the life of man, in its principles, is in the
brains, and in its principiates in the body. In its
principles is in its beginnings, and in its principiates
is in the parts produced and formed from its begin-
nings; and by life (which is the spirit of God) in
its principles, is meant the will and the understand-
ing. These two are what in the brains are in their
principles, and in the body in their principiates.
E
58 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNiTED.

That the principles or beginnings of man's life are


in the brains, is manifest,-l. From the sense itself,
in that when a man applies his mind to any thing
and thinks, he perceives that he thinks in the brain;
he draws inwardly, as it were, his eyesight, and
keeps his forehead intense, and perceives that there
is inwardly a speculation, chiefly within the fore-
head and somewhat above. 2. From the formation
of man in the womb, in that the brains or the head
is the first, and that this, for a long time afterwards,
is larger than the body. 3. That the head is above
and the body below; and it is according to order,
that superiors should act upon inferiors, and not
vice versa. 4. That when the brain is hurt either
in the womb, or by a wound or by disease or by
too great application, thought is debilitated and
sometimes the mind is delirious. 5. That aU the
external senses of the body, which are 'the sight, the
hearing, the smell and taste, together with the
general sense which is the feeling, as also the
speech, are in the anterior part of the head, which
i~ called the face, and have immediate communica-
tion with the brain, and derive thence their sensi-
tive and active life. 6. Hence it is that the affec-
tions, which are of love, appear in a certain image
in the face, and that the thoughts, which are of
wisdom, appear in a certain light in the eyes." It
appears, then, that the brain is the immediate re-
ceptacle of man's first principles, which are the will
and the understanding; and these the immediate
receptacles of life, which is the Spirit of Gad, or
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. b9

love and wisdom. These first principles, the will


and the understanding, are from the brain diffused
through the whole body.
We will now endeavour to show, "that there is
a correspondence of all things of the mind with 11.11
things of the body. This is new, because it has
not heretofore been known, by reason that it was
not known what spiritual is, and what is its differ-
ence from natural, and therefore it was not known
what correspondence is j for there is a correspond-
ence of spiritual things with natural things, and
by it a conjunction of them. It is said, that here-
tofore it was not known what spiritual is, and what
its correspondence is with natural, and consequently
what correspondence is-but still both might have
been known. Who does not know that affection
and thought are spiritual, and thence that 11.11 things
of affection and thought are spiritual 1 Who does
not know that action and speech are natura1, and
thence that aU things of action and speech are
natural1 Who does not know that affection and
thought, which are spiritual, cause a man to act
and speak 1 Who may not thence know what
correspondence is, of things spiritual with things
natural1 Does not thought cause the tongue to
spaak; and affection together with thought cause
the body to act 1 They are two distinct things: 1
can think and not speak, 1 can will and not act j
and it is known that the body does not think and
will, but that the thought falls into RpCCCh, and the
will into action. Does not affection shine forth in
60 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

the face, and present therein a type of itself. This


every one knOWs. ls not the a.ffection, considered
in itself spiritual, and the changes of the face, which
are alao caHed the countenance, uatural1 Who
might not thence have concluded that there is a cor-
respondence, and consequently that there is corres-
pondence of all things of the mind with all things
of the body1 A.nd forasmuch as aH things of the
mind have relation to affection and thought, or
what is the same, to the will and the understand-
ing, and aH things of the body to the heart and the
lungs, that there is a correspondence of the will
with the heart, and of the understanding with the
lungs. That such things have not been known,
although they might have been known, is by reason,
that man was become so external, that he would
acknowledge nothing but what was natural. This
was the delight of his love (or the delight of his
heart), and thence the delight of his understanding;
wherefore to elevate his thoughts above the natural
principle to any thing spiritual separate from the
natura!, was unpleasant to him; therefore he could
not think otherwise from bis natural love and de-
light, than that the spiritual principle was apurer
natural principle, and that correspondence was a
somewhat fiowing in by continuity, yea, the mere
natural man caunot think any thing separate from
what is natural, this to him being nothing. A
farther reason why these things have not heretofore
been sean and known, is because aH things of reli-
gion, which are called spiritual, have been removed
RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED. 61

out of the sight of man by this dogma received iu


the whole Christian world, that things theological,
which are spiritual, and which the councils and
leaders of the church have concluded upon, are
blindly to he helieved, because, say they, they trau-
scend the understanding." "The correspondence of
the will and the understanding with the heart and
the lungs cannot he nakedly confirmed, that is, by
things rational alone, but they InaY by effects j the
case herein is similar as with the causes of things j
these, indeed, may be Beon rationally, but not clear-
ly, except by effects, for the causes are in the effects
and give themselves to be seen through them;
neither does the mind, before seeing effects, confirm
itself concerning cau!'!es: the effects of this corres-
pondence shall be delivered in what follows."
To accompany ouI' Author through these varions
effects, by which alone his doctrine can be fully
proved and enforced, would require that deep in-
terest in the subject, which they only who know
its importancé could he expected to feel. But as
Bome few striking illustrations of the operations of
the principle in general InaY be seleeted, we will
endeavour to perform this service. Though we
have, in the above quotations, attempted to show
the existence of the principle of correspondence in
its particular operation between the soul and body
of man; yet, as hinted previously to these quota-
tions, its origin is in the Supreme Being, thence
descending and forming the conjunetive power,
through the varions degrees of altitude, from the
62 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

Divine Head to the feet or extreme of creation,


the naturaI earths, said in Scripture to he "God's
footstool;" which extreme is forever protracting,
that is, bcings in the natural worlds are forever
increasing in number, in correl!pondence with the
eternal emanation of divine love from its g:loriou8
fountain. Our Âuthor himself has somewhere an
observation to this effect, that particulars are BO
numerous and llO various, as llOmetimes to confuse
the mind; and that it is therefore occasionally
better to explain a subject by universals only, leav-
ing the particulars of those universals to some more
appropriate opportunity. For it is an important
truth among those unfolded by Emanuel Sweden-
borg, that the Divine is the same in the greatest or
most comprehensive, and in the most minute parti-
cular of the creation; and this is surely consistent
with the perception of every pious and reflecting
mind, which acknowledges the same blessed hand as
fully in the leaf of a plant as in the starry heavens.
There cau be no correspondence in the creation
more deeply interesting to man, than that which
subsists between the Omnipotent Creator and him-
self. Yet that there is such a correspondence is
generally proved by the acknowledgment of t}1e
wise and good, that "in Him we live, move, and
have our being;" that "from Him cometh down
every good and perfect gift;" and that to Him is
due from man all the gratitude, obedience, and love
of loyal subjects to their true and perfect King.
But, of even this very generaI view of the corres-
RELIGION A.'ffi PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 63

pondence of man with the Deity, little we believe


is really understaod. We acknowledge, indeed, the
truth, that "in Gad we live, move, and have our
being;" but this acknowledgment is made not sa
much because we see with the understanding that
it il! so, as because we perceive that we cannot up-
hold ourselves in life or health, or without divine
&id procure for ourselves those things which are
requisite for our support. But we will endeavour
ta show, by the clear light of reason, that the
thing Ül really as piety teaches us ta believe. We
have samewhere before g!anced at the primary
and important truth, that Gad is in form a Man.
On a clear and decided perception of this truth so
much depends, that we cannot proceed without
endeavouring ta illustrate it in the language of our
excellent Author :
"Of how great importance it is to have a just
idea of Gad, may appear from this consideration,
that the idea of God constitutes the inmost thought
of ail those who have any religion, for ail things of
religion and divine worship have respect ta God:
and ina.'!much as God is universallyand particularly
in all things of religion and worship, therefore un-
less it be II. just ides of God, no communication can
he given with the heavens: hence it is, that in the
spiritual world every nation has its place accord-
ing ta its idea of God as Man for in this and in
no other il! the ides of the Lord. That the state of
every man'8 life after desth is according ta the idea
of Gad which he has confirmed in himself, appears
64 RELIGION AND PHlLOSOPHY UNITED.

manifestly from the reverse of the proposition, viz.,


that the negation of God constitutes hell, and in
the Christian world, the negation of the Lord's
Divinity." It is farther asserted and morally
proved, "that to he, and to must, in God-Man are
distinctly one. Where there is an essence, there is
also an existence: one is not possible without the
other; for essence is by or in existence, and not
without it. This the rational comprehends, when
it thinks whether there can he any essence which
does not exist, and whether there can he any exis-
tence but from an essence; and inasmuch as one
exists with and not without the other, it follows
that they are one, but distinctly one. They are
distinctly one, as is the case with love and wisdom;
for love is essence, and wisdom existence, inasmuch
as love does not exist but in wisdom, nor wisdom
but from love; wherefore when love is in wisdom,
then it exists. These two are such an one, that
they may be distinguished, indeed, in thought, but
not in act; and inasmuch as they may be distin-
guished in thought but not in act, therefore it is
said they are distinctly one. Essence and existence
in God-Man are also distinctly one as soul and
body; soul does not exist without its body, nor
body without its soul. It is the divine soul of God-
Man which is understood by the divine essence,
and the divine body which is understood by the
divine existence. That a soul can exist without a
body, and exercise thought and wisdom, is an error
proceeding from fallacies; for every soul of man is
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 65

in a spiritual body, which fully appears after it has


put off ita material covering, which it carried about
with it in the world.-The reason why an essence
is not an essence unless it exista, is, because it is
not before in a form, and that which is not in a
form has not a quality, and that which has not
a quality, is not any thing. That which exista
from an essence makes one with the essence, by
reason that it is from the essence; hence there is
an uniting into one, and hence it is that one is
the others mutually and reciprocally, also, that
one is aIl in all, in the other as in itself.-
Hence it may appear, that 000 is [necessarily in a
form and consequently] a Man, and thereby He is
a God existing, not existing from Himself, but in
Him.self. He who exista in Him.self, is God, from
whom all things are." The reason given, in another
part of these workll, why God exista in the human
form, in preference to every other, is, that the
human is, in tmth, the most perfect of aIl forms,
uniting in itself the highest possible perfections of
all possible forms. The correspondence of man,
then, with bis Maker, in tbis most glorious of aIl
forms, must constitute the ground of bis highe.'lt
excellence, the perfection of bis being. Thus in
000, in His form, in His spirit, we verily do "live,
move, and have our being;" that" from Him cometh
down every good and perfect gift," is proved in the
position, "that there is oue God-Man from whom
all things are, and in whom infinite things are diE-
tinctlyone."
66 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

To trace this beautiful and striking correspond-


euce through the numerous and various particu-
lara of the essence and existence of man, would he,
to ourselves, a most delightful task, but to our
readers, perhaps, a wearisome one; we will there-
fore endeavour to conclude the sketch, which we
desired to give of the philosophical principles of
the New J erusalem Church, by one more illustra-
tion of the principle of correspondence, drawn from
its existence and operation in the W ord of God,
or Holy Scriptures.
That the long and uninterrupted possession of a
blessïng, is apt to render us insensible to its real
and full worth, though doubtless a trite observation,
is not the less true; and it is, we fear, but two
applicable to our estimation of that truly heavenly
treasure, that "pearl of great priee," which we
possess in the blessed Scriptures.
It has, we conceive, become extremely obscure,
and even doubtful, in the present age, to the most
learned and enlightened minds, how and in what
sense the Scriptures are the W ord of God. They
find themselves, apparently, necessitated to reject,
first one part and then another, and at length query
in what part, and in what manner its sanctity exista.
This is, we cannot doubt, a necessary consequence
of the misapprehension which too generally pre-
vails respecting its Divine Author. Were it in
heart acknowledged, that the Supreme Being is,
indeed, our own perfect Prototype, thus sending
forth, by divine speech, His holy will, a great part
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 67
of the difficulty would vanish. Were it farther
understood that the word of divine truth, delivered
in the heavens, must descend by degrees to the
various intelligences of the celestial and spiritual
regions, and thus be prepared, by correspondence,
to meet 'its less and less perfect recipients; we
should also perceive, that when it appears in ulti-
mate, material nature, it must be so veiled and
obscured by the grossness of its final vehicle, as to
render its original and divine excellence almost
imperceptible. We should then, too, easily com-
prehend why we accordingly find the external
W ord in this obscured and darkened state, ex-
hibiting only here and there glimpses, as it were,
of its internaI effulgence. As it is believed, how-
ever, that man is formed with a capacity to rise on
the seale of being in endless progression, and that
his spiritual existence and subsistence is and can
be alone from the source or W ord of divine truth,-
it may weH be conceived, that that glorious W ord
must be formed to accompany and support him in
this upward progress; that if his spiritual birth
takes place, and his growth continues to such a
degree, that the "sincere milk of the W ord" be
not sufficiently nutritious for him, in that W ord
shall surely be found the stronger "meat and drink
indeed," which shaH sustain and still continue to
nourish him in that spiritual growth. We uni-
versally find, that children, in this natural world,
are taught and led by appearances. They at first
imagine that, like themselves, every thing has life
68 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

and feeling; and as they advance in age, these ap-


pearances, which we find variously useful in bring-
ing forward the powers of the mind, are gradually
dissipated, and leave them in perception of the
real truth. Thus the spiritual life of man is formed
first by appearances of truth in thll natural or literai
sense of the Scriptures; which, however, is broken,
desultory, and sometimes enigmatical, that this
growing mind may he excited to search deep and
more deeply.
Above, or through the merely literai sense, is
generally perceived, by the refiecting mind, a more
rational and refined meaning or train of sentiment,
from which spring the innumerable variety of doc-
trines, or different combinations of tenets, which
form the various sects that have filled the religious
world. This variety of construction must probably
continue, in conformity to the different views of
mankind, till the literaI or external sense is uni-
versally found and believed to be only the natural
covering or body, containing a soul or spirit, accord-
ing to the information of our blessed Saviour:
"Hear my words, for they are spirit and they are
life." The spiritual sense of the 8criptures, how.
ever, far from treating of the illusory and changing
scenes and objects of this momentary existence (as
the literaI sense surely does), opens, unfolds, and
explains the formation, birth, and mode of existence
of the spiritual man, the true church of God;
which, together with the progress of this spiritual
man through the states of infancy and childhood to
RELIGION .AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 69

DUl.turity, is nothing less than the regeneration or


new birth and life, which our Saviour informs us,
in literaI language, must take place in every indi-
vidual, before he can see the kingdom of heaven.
Thus this spiritual sense of the W ord feeds the_
hungry and satisp.es the thirsty soul, with the
heavenly food and drink of etemallife, the know-
ledge and power to practise goodness in truth.
Ever thus enlarging the views and exalting the
mind, by instructing it in the substantial princi-
pIes of spiritual wisdom, its wonders and delights
have "not entered into the heart of the merely
natural, man to conceive;" but with an indistinct
hope of which, the truly pious mind haB been and
ever will be supported and upheld, through the
soul-searching scenes of this probationary state.
As truths are, then, we conceive, a foundation,
"sure and steadfast as their source, the Rock of
Ages," it cannot, we think, but be evident to every
reflecting mind, that in the knowledge and use of
the glorious truths and goods, thus opened and un-
folded ta the strengthened soul, it shall find that
solid and never failing foundation for its everlasting
hope and trust.
That there are contained, then, in the holy W ord,
degrees of divine truth, the spiritual within, and
entirely distinct from, the natural, as the soul is with-
in, and distinct from, the body of man; and within
the spiritual, the still more perfect, the celestial
degree, treating entirely of the descent of our Lord
into ultimate nature, and His ascent thence to His
70 RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED.

original glory, corrcsponding with the degrees of


altitude in creation: that aIl these things may be,
is surely conceivable ;-that they really are, will,
we believe, be found by every one who truly seeks
with a willing and teachable mind.
One thing, however, remains -j>o be said, which
we consider highly important. As in the glorious
first cause there is a holy union of divine love and
divine wisdom, which exist for ever distinctly one,
so, in the holy W ord there is a correspondent and
eternal union of goodness and truth. There is also
in man the correspondent and indissoluble union of
male and female ;-the masculine principle more
especially corresponding with truth, the offspring
of divine wisdom,-the fcminine principle more
especially eorrcsponding with good, springing from
divine love. Now, as in mankind, the particular
receptacle for the light of divine truth is the
understanding, and that for the heat of divine love
is the will; so the male is formed to exeel IDs
partner in the department of the understanding
and consequent reception of divine wisdom; and
the female to be distinguished by the predominance
of the love of wisdom as existing in the male.
Thus, if the writer has herein given but an obscure
and very imperfect sketch of the philosophical prin-
ciples, which form the basis of a glorious system of
divine truth,-it is, that its heavenly image has been
reeeived in the warmth of the heart rather than in
the light of the understanding; and that to be fully
illustrated, it must be transfused from the fcIninine
RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY UNITED. 71

heart into the masculine understanding, thence to


be made manifest in the light of true wisdom.
It may, perhaps, be a subject of painful specula-
tion to some pious minds, should any such think
fit to peruse this little work, how and in what
manner the Chri~tian church (which is acknow-
ledged to have been a true church of God) can 00
intermingled with, as it were, and form a part of
the superstructure of the New J erusalem Church.
Should the author have been so happy as to have
excited sufficient interest in the public mind to in-
duce a more general inquiry after the writings in
question, such a doubt would, by their perusal, 00
easily and immediately dissipated. But lest that
should not be the happy result, it may be observed,
that as every true man, every sincere lover of God
and his neighbour, in heart and practice, is, in him-
self, an individual church, a holy temple, in which
bis God delighteth to dwell ;-so, we cannot doubt,
will every snch real Christian find himself gradually
prepared for a reception of the superior degrees of
divine love and wisdom, now granted to man, in
tbis new and glorious dispensation, and thus 00-
come a precious stone in the heavenly building.
May many such be daily added; and find abundant
reason to join the writer in ascribing glory and
honour, dominion and power, unto Him who sitteth
on the throne, to the Lamb for ever and ever!

THE END.
C "'17.2

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